[HISTORY: Adopted by the Municipal Council
of the City of Clifton 7-17-83 by Ord. No. 4169-73 (Article 11 of
Chapter 21 of the Revised Ordinances of the City of Clifton, New Jersey,
1960). Amendments noted where applicable.]

Any act or acts which shall constitute a violation of any
criminal or disorderly persons statute of the State of New Jersey,
or the commission of which shall constitute an act of juvenile delinquency
under the provisions of N.J.S.A. 2A:4-14[1] or the commission of which shall violate any quasi-criminal
ordinance of the City of Clifton other than traffic ordinances.

It shall be unlawful for any parent by any act, word, deed
or course of conduct or by any failure to act or to exercise supervision
or control over a minor to suffer, allow, permit, aid, abet, assist,
cause or encourage said minor to commit or participate in the commission
of an offense as that term is hereinbefore in this chapter defined.

Whenever a minor shall be arrested or detained for
the commission of any offense within the City of Clifton, any parent
of such minor shall be immediately notified by the Police Department
of the City of Clifton by written notification advising the parent
of such arrest or detention, the reason therefor and the parent's
responsibility and liability to fine or imprisonment, or both, under
this chapter. Upon the minor's conviction of any such offense, any
parent of such minor shall be immediately notified by the Police Department
of the City of Clifton by written notification advising the parent
of such conviction.

Whenever it shall appear that a minor has been convicted of the number of offenses necessary to classify him as an habitual offender as defined in § 341-1 hereof, and further that the parent of such minor has been notified of said prior violations and convictions in accordance with § 341-61A hereof, then on such minor again being convicted of any offense, said prior convictions shall be prima facie evidence of parental neglect as herein defined, and the parent of such habitual offender may be deemed guilty of parental neglect and, upon conviction, shall be subject to a fine of not more than $500 or imprisonment in the county jail for not more than 90 days, or both.